Summary of "Trader Rentable Rankea los Mejores Indicadores de Trading"

Finance-Focused Summary (Trading Indicator Tier List)

The presenter (referred to as a Trader) ranks 10 trading indicators into a 5-tier system: F, D, C, A, S. The ranking is based on:

The central argument is that indicators can objectify trading rules and filter false signals, but stacking too many indicators “without sense” is counterproductive.

The video is framed as educational. It mentions an “audited track record,” but the subtitles do not provide specific portfolio/market return numbers.


Disclosures / Cautions


Indicators Ranked (Purpose + Key Reasoning)

S Tier (Best / Top)

  1. ATR (Average True Range)S

    • Measures volatility (not direction): average price movement over a period.
    • Uses:
      • Stop-loss
      • Take-profit
      • Other targets
    • Why it’s valued: works across many trading styles (e.g., price action, “Smart Money,” indicator-based, quantitative).
  2. EMA (Exponential Moving Average)S

    • A moving average that weights recent prices more, reacting faster to trend changes.
    • Uses:
      • Identify trend direction (up/down/sideways)
      • Dynamic support/resistance
      • Bullish/bearish crossovers (especially when combining EMAs)
  3. BWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price)S

    • Session-based average price weighted by volume.
    • Uses:
      • Determine whether price is expensive/cheap vs the institutional average
      • Gauge buyer/seller balance
      • Help with intraday “false/not false” starting signals

A Tier

  1. ADX (Average Directional Index)A

    • Determines whether the market is uptrending, downtrending, or ranging.
    • Filters false breakouts/starts by requiring sufficient trend strength.
  2. Volume ProfileA

    • Shows traded volume by price level (not time).
    • Uses:
      • Identify institutional interest
      • Volume-based support/resistance
      • Identify where price is accepted/rejected
    • Note: ranked slightly below BWAP because (per the presenter) fewer strategies “align with it.”

C Tier (Average)

  1. RSI (Relative Strength Index)C

    • Measures momentum/strength; identifies overbought/oversold and divergences.
    • Uses:
      • Potential reversals via divergence
      • Momentum and “how overheated/exaggerated” moves are
    • Limitation: if used only as “wait for divergences,” signals may be too delayed.
      • Recommendation implied: pair with other tools (e.g., multi-timeframe + price action zones).
  2. SMA (Simple Moving Average)C

    • Equal-weight average of price over N periods.
    • Limitation vs EMA: less responsive because it does not overweight recent data.

D Tier (Weak)

  1. MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence)D

    • Momentum/trend indicator built from the MACD line, signal line, and histogram.
    • Uses:
      • Confirm trend direction
      • Detect turns
      • Identify divergences between price and the indicator
    • Why ranked below RSI: the presenter considers its signals/utility weaker based on their preferences/experience.
  2. Pivot PointsD

    • Calculates potential support/resistance from prior-day prices.
    • Uses:
      • Intraday key zones
      • Entry/exit zones
      • Likely turning points
    • Limitation: the presenter argues many strategies no longer need pivots because zones can be anticipated using price action and other tools.

F Tier (Worst)

  1. Bullinger BandsF
    • Volatility bands around a central moving average; bands expand/contract with volatility.
    • Uses:
      • Volatility compression
      • Possible breakouts/direction changes
    • Limitation: called highly replaceable and too general, with preferences for alternatives such as Donchian channels / “Weinstein-related” indicators.

Step-by-Step / Framework Elements Mentioned

Although not presented as a full trading system, the presenter describes a workflow logic for using indicators effectively:

  1. Build the foundation first: price action Develop strong price action skills across any timeframe/asset/market phase.

  2. Add indicators to improve execution (not to replace judgment)

    • Use ATR for volatility-based risk and targets
    • Use RSI/divergence with multi-timeframe confirmation (e.g., larger timeframe zones + smaller timeframe divergence/overbought-oversold)

    • Use ADX for trend regime filtering

  3. Avoid indicator stacking

    • Don’t add indicators “just because”
    • Don’t assume indicators “cover gaps” in theory/practice without rule-based application

Key Numbers and Explicit Claims


Instruments / Tickers Mentioned


Presenters / Sources

Category ?

Finance


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